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Ministerial to Advance Religious Freedom Hears Tearful Testimonies 

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WASHINGTON -- Day one of the Ministerial to Advance Religious Freedom conference saw many emotional moments as victims of religious persecution shared their testimonies.  

The room was packed with people representing nations and religions worldwide.  So many people wanted to attend that organizers had to cut off registration weeks ago because they'd reached capacity. 

"We've hit a nerve here," said Sam Brownback, US Ambassador-at-Large for International Religious Freedom.  "People want religious freedom and they want it now." 

"All people from every place on the globe must be permitted to practice their faith openly," said Secretary of State Mike Pompeo.  "In their homes in their places of worship in the public square and believe what they want to believe."

Unfortunately one only has to go back nine months to find examples of the faithful suffering because of their beliefs. Some of those victims spoke out at the meeting.

On October 27, 2018, 11 people were killed by a gunman at a Pennsylvania synagogue.

"The perpetrator of the massacre in the tree of life not only stole 11 beautiful lives that he had no God-given right to do, but he stole the faith of countless Jews," said Rabbi Jeffrey Myers of the Tree of Life Synagogue.

March 15, 2019, 51 worshippers were killed at a New Zealand mosque.  Among the dead was Farid Ahmed's wife.

"I had to go home alone, and I had to tell my daughter her mother would never come home again," Ahmed said.

Easter Sunday, April 21, 2019, suicide bombers killed 250 people, including many children in Sri Lanka.  

"And on that fateful day when the Sunday school teacher asked them, how many are willing to die for Jesus almost all of them raised their hands," said Yamini Ravindran, legal and advocacy coordinator for the National Christian Evangelical Alliance of Sri Lanka.

"And we see it as a global crisis around the world that has received far too little attention, a global crisis that we are determined to reverse," Brownback said. 

Organizers say 80 percent of people worldwide live in a religiously restricted environment.  They're hoping the conference, now in its second year, will mark the beginning of a global human rights movement centered on religious freedom.   

Secretary of State Mike Pompeo says his own Christian beliefs compel him to fight for the freedom of others not just in the United States, but around the world. 

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About The Author

Eric
Philips

Eric Philips is the White House Correspondent for CBN News and is based in the network’s Washington DC bureau. There he keeps close tabs on the Pentagon, Homeland Security, and the Department of Justice, breaking down any international or domestic threats to the United States. Prior to his tenure at CBN, Eric was an Anchor and Consumer Investigative Reporter for the NBC affiliate in Richmond, Virginia. While there, he won an Emmy for best morning newscast. In addition, Eric has covered news for local stations in Atlanta, Charlotte, Norfolk, and Salisbury, MD. He also served for five years as a